Part 1
A text in which there are eight gaps. After the text there are four possible answers for each gap and candidates have to choose the correct answer (A, B, C or D).

8 questions

Part 2
A text in which there are eight gaps. Candidates have to find the correct word for each gap.

8 questions

Part 3
A text containing eight gaps. Each gap represents a word. Next to the gap is the stem of the missing word which candidates have to change in some way to complete the sentence correctly.

8 questions

Part 4
A task asking candidates to read six items consisting of a lead-in sentence and a gapped sentence. Candidates have to complete the gap with three to six words guided by a given ‘key’ word.

6 questions

Part 5
A text followed by six multiple-choice questions. For each question, there are four options and candidates have to choose A, B, C or D.

6 questions

Part 6
Candidates are presented with four short texts followed by four multiple-matching questions. They must read across all of them so as to match a given prompt to elements in those texts.

4 questions

Part 7
A text from which six paragraphs have been removed. After the text, candidates will find the missing paragraphs in jumbled order and will have to decide which paragraph best fits each gap.

6 questions

Part 8
Ten multiple matching questions followed by a single text or several shorter texts. Candidates have to match a given prompt to certain elements of the text(s).

10 questions

Writing

1 hour 30 minutes

Part 1
Candidates are presented with a text to read and are then asked to write an essay based on two points included in it. They will have to explain which of the two points is more important and give reasons for their opinion.

220-260 words

Part 2
Candidates are presented with a situation and given a choice of contextualized task (choice of three tasks). They are asked to write one of the following: a letter or an email, a proposal, a report or a review.

220-260 words

Listening

about 40 minutes

Part 1
Three short extracts from conversations between interacting speakers. Candidates are asked two multiple-choice questions per extract and are given three answer choices (A, B or C) each time.

6 questions

Part 2
Candidates listen to a monologue (which may be introduced by a presenter) lasting approximately 3 minutes. They are asked to complete the sentences on the question paper with the missing information they hear on the recording.

8 questions

Part 3
A conversation lasting approximately 4 minutes between two or more speakers. Candidates have to answer six multiple-choice questions, each with 4 answer choices (A, B, C or D).

6 questions

Part 4 – (Multiple matching)
A series of five themed monologues of approximately 30 seconds each. On the question paper, there are two tasks and for each task candidates have to match each of the five speakers to one of eight possible answers.

10 questions

Speaking

15 minutes per pair of candidates

Part 1
A brief conversation between the candidates and the interlocutor (all questions are spoken).

4 parts

Part 2
An individual long turn for each candidate followed by a brief response from the second candidate. In turn, both candidates are presented with a set of three pictures to talk about (e.g. describe, compare, express opinion about them etc).

Part 3
A two-way conversation between the candidates who are given spoken instructions and written prompts to be used in a discussion. The discussion involves a decision-making task and requires them to exchange ideas, express and justify their opinion, suggest, speculate, evaluate, negotiate etc.

Part 4
A discussion between the candidates on topics related to the above collaborative task. Candidates are asked to express and justify their opinion, speculate etc.